David and Goliath | ||
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4. PART IV.
SCENE, another Part of the Camp.DAVID.
Eternal Justice, in whose awful scale
Th' event of battle hangs! Eternal Mercy,
Whose universal beam illumines all!
If, by thy attributes I may, unblam'd,
Address thee; Lord of glory, hear me now!
O teach these hands to war, these arms to fight!
Thou ever present help in time of need!
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And let thine everlasting arms support me!
Then, tho' the heathen rage, I shall not fear.
Jehovah! be my buckler. Mighty Lord!
Thou, who hast deign'd by humble instruments,
To manifest the marvels of thy might,
Be present with me now! 'tis thine own cause!
Thy wisdom will foresee, thy goodness chuse,
And thy omnipotence will execute
Thy high designs, tho' by a feeble arm!
I feel a secret impulse drive me on,
And my soul springs impatient for the fight.
'Tis not the heated spirits, or warm blood
Of sanguine youth; and yet I pant, I burn
To meet th' insulting foe. I thirst for glory;
Yet not the fading glory of renown,
The perishable praise of mortal man.
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ELIAB.
What do I hear, thou truant? thou hast dar'd,
Ev'n to the awful presence of the king,
Bear thy presumption!
DAVID.
He who fears the Lord,
Shall boldly stand before the face of kings,
And shall not be asham'd.
ELIAB.
But what wild dream
Has urg'd thee to this deed of desp'rate rashness?
Thou mean'st, so have I learn'd, to meet Goliath,
His single arm to thine.
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'Tis what I mean,
Ev'n on this spot; each moment I expect
His wish'd approach.
ELIAB.
Go home; return, for shame!
Nor madly pull destruction on thy head.
Thy doating father, when thy shepherd's coat,
Drench'd in thy blood is brought him, will lament,
And rend his furrow'd cheek, and silver hair,
As if some mighty loss had touch'd his age;
And mourn, even as the partial patriarch mourn'd,
When Joseph's bloody garment he receiv'd,
From his less dear, not less deserving, sons.
But whence that glitt'ring ornament, which hangs
Useless upon thy thigh?
DAVID.
'Tis the king's gift.
But thou art right; it suits not me, my brother.
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Lest men shou'd say I put my trust in ought,
Save an eternal shield.
ELIAB.
Then thou indeed
Art bent to seek thy death.
DAVID.
And what is death?
Is it so terrible to die, my brother?
Or grant it terrible, say is it not
Inevitable too? If, by eluding death,
When some high duty calls us forth to die,
We cou'd for ever shun it, and escape
The universal lot; then fond self-love,
Then human prudence, boldly might produce
Their fine-spun arguments, their learn'd harangues,
Their cobweb arts, their phrase sophistical,
Their subtile doubts, and all the specious trick,
Of eloquent cunning lab'ring for its end.
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Why fondly study, with ingenious pains,
To put it off?—To breathe a little longer,
Is to defer our fate, but not to shun it:
Small gain! which Wisdom with indiff'rent eye
Beholds. Why wish to drink the bitter dregs
Of life's exhausted chalice, whose last runnings,
Ev'n at the best, are vapid? Why not die,
If Heav'n so will) in manhood's op'ning bloom,
When all the flush of life is gay about us,
When sprightly youth, with many a new-born joy,
Solicits every sense? So may we then,
Present a sacrifice, unmeet, indeed,
(Ah, how unmeet!) but more acceptable
Than the world's leavings; than a worn-out heart,
By vice enfeebled, and by vain desires
Sunk and exhausted!
ELIAB.
Hark! I hear a sound
Of multitudes approaching!
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'Tis the giant!
I see him not, but hear his measur'd pace.
ELIAB.
Look, where his pond'rous shield is borne before him!
DAVID.
Like a broad moon its ample disk protends.
But soft, what unknown prodigy appears?
A moving mountain cas'd in polish'd brass!
ELIAB.
[Getting behind David.
How's this? thou dost not tremble. Thy firm joints
Betray no fear: Thy accents are not broken:
Thy cheek retains its red, thine eye its lustre.
He comes more near. Dost thou not fear him now?
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No.
The vast colossal statue nor inspires
Respect nor fear. Mere magnitude of form,
Without proportion'd intellect and valour,
Nor strikes my soul with rev'rence nor with awe.
ELIAB.
Near, and more near, he comes. I hold it rash
To stay so near him, and expose a life,
Which may hereafter serve the state. Farewell!
[Exit.
[Goliath advances, clad in complete armour. One bearing his shield precedes him. The opposing armies are seen at a distance, drawn up on each side of the valley. Goliath begins to speak before he comes on. David stands in the same place, with an air of indifference.]
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Where is the mighty man of war who dares
Accept the challenge of Philistia's chief?
What victor-king, what gen'ral drench'd in blood,
Claims this high privilege? What are his rights?
What proud credentials does the boaster bring
To prove his claim? What cities laid in ashes?
What ruin'd provinces? What slaughter'd realms?
What heads of heroes, and what hearts of kings,
In battle kill'd, or at his altars slain,
Has he to boast? Is his bright armoury
Thick set with spears, and swords and coats of mail,
Of vanquish'd nations, by his single arm
Subdued? Where is the mortal man so bold,
So much a wretch, so out of love with life,
To dare the weight of this uplifted spear,
Which never fell innoxious? Yet I swear,
I grudge the glory to his parting soul
To fall by this right-hand. 'Twill sweeten death,
To know he had the honour to contend
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From blank oblivion shall retrieve his name,
Who dar'd to perish in unequal fight
With Gath's triumphant champion. Come, advance!
Philistia's Gods to Israel's. Sound, my herald.
Sound for the battle strait!
[Herald sounds the trumpet.
DAVID.
Behold thy foe!
GOLIATH.
I see him not.
DAVID.
Behold him here!
GOLIATH.
Say, where?
Direct my sight. I do not war with boys.
DAVID.
I stand prepar'd, thy single arm to mine.
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Why, this is mockery, Minion! it may chance
To cost thee dear. Sport not with things above thee:
But tell me who, of all this num'rous host,
Expects his death from me? Which is the man
Whom Israel sends to meet my bold defiance?
DAVID.
Th' election of my sov'reign falls on me.
GOLIATH.
On thee? on thee? by Dagon 'tis too much!
Thou curled Minion! thou a nation's champion!
'Twou'd move my mirth at any other time;
But trifling's out of tune. Begone, light boy!
And tempt me not too far.
DAVID.
I do defy thee;
Thou foul idolater! hast thou not scorn'd
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By me he will avenge upon thy head
Thy nations' sins and thine. Arm'd with his name,
Unshrinking, I dare meet the stoutest foe
That ever bath'd his hostile spear in blood.
GOLIATH,
ironically.
Indeed! 'tis wondrous well! now, by my Gods,
The stripling plays the orator! Vain boy!
Keep close to that same bloodless war of words,
And thou shalt still be safe. Tongue-valiant warrior!
Where is thy sylvan crook, with garlands hung,
Of idle field-flowers? Where thy wanton harp,
Thou dainty-finger'd hero? better strike
Its note lascivious, or the lulling lute
Touch softly, than provoke the trumpet's rage.
I will not stain the honour of my spear
With thy inglorious blood. Shall that fair cheek
Be scarr'd with wounds unseemly? Rather go,
And hold fond dalliance with the Syrian maids;
To wanton measures dance, and let them braid
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They, for their lost Adonis, may mistake
Thy dainty form.
DAVID.
Peace, thou unhallow'd railer!
O tell it not in Gath, nor let the sound
Reach Askelon, how once your slaughter'd Lords,
By mighty Sampson found one common grave:
When his broad shoulder the firm pillars heav'd,
And to its base the tott'ring fabric shook.
GOLIATH.
Insulting boy! perhaps thou hast not heard
The infamy of that inglorious day,
When your weak hosts at Eben-ezer pitch'd
Their quick-abandon'd tents? Then, when your ark,
Your talisman, your charm, your boasted pledge
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And yet not tamely, since by me 'twas won.
When with this good right-arm I thinn'd your ranks,
And bravely crush'd, beneath a single blow,
The chosen guardians of this vaunted shrine,
Hophni and Phineas. The fam'd ark itself,
I bore to Ashdod.
DAVID.
I remember too,
Since thou provok'st th' unwelcome truth, how all
Your blushing priests beheld their idol's shame,
When prostrate Dagon fell before the ark,
And your frail God was shiver'd. Then Philistia,
Idolatrous Philistia flew for succour
To Israel's help, and all her smitten nobles
Confess'd the Lord was God, and the bless'd ark,
Gladly, with reverential awe restor'd!
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By Ashdod's fane thou ly'st. Now will I meet thee,
Thou insect-warrior! since thou dar'st me thus!
Already I behold thy mangled limbs,
Dissever'd each from each, e'er long to feed
The fierce, blood-snuffing vulture. Mark me well!
Around my spear I'll twist thy shining locks,
And toss in air thy head all gash'd with wounds;
Thy lips, yet quiv'ring with the dire convulsion
Of recent death! Art thou not terrified?
DAVID.
No.
True courage is not mov'd by breath of words.
But the rash bravery of boiling blood,
Impetuous, knows no settled principle.
A fev'rish tide, it has its ebbs and flows,
As spirits rise or fall, as wine inflames,
Or circumstances change. But inborn courage,
The gen'rous child of Fortitude and Faith,
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And, like the stedfast pole-star, never once
From the same fix'd and faithful point declines.
GOLIATH.
The curses of Philistia's gods be on thee!
This fine-drawn speech is meant to lengthen out
That little life thy words pretend to scorn.
DAVID.
Ha! say'st thou so? come on then! Mark us well.
Thou com'st to me with sword, and spear, and shield!
In the dread name of Israel's God I come;
The living Lord of Hosts whom thou defy'st!
Yet tho' no shield I bring, no arms, except
These five smooth stones I gather'd from the brook,
With such a simple sling as shepherds use;
Yet all expos'd, defenceless as I am,
The God I serve shall give thee up a prey
To my victorious arm. This day, I mean
To make the uncircumcised tribes confess
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Spite of thy vaunted strength, and giant bulk,
To glut the carrion kites. Nor thee alone;
The mangled carcasses of your thick hosts,
Shall spread the plains of Elah: till Philistia,
Thro' all her trembling tents and flying bands,
Shall own that Judah's God is God indeed!
I dare thee to the trial!
GOLIATH.
Follow me.
In this good spear I trust.
DAVID.
I trust in Heaven!
The God of battles stimulates my arm,
And fires my soul with ardor not its own.
David and Goliath | ||